Acetic acid is a well-developed intermediate used in several successful commercial chemical processes. Eventual applications for acetic acid derivatives include latex emulsion resins for paints, adhesives, paper coatings, textile finishing agents, cellulose acetate fibers, cigarette filter tow, and cellulosic plastics. It is also found in ocean water, oilfield brines, rain, and at trace concentrations in many plant and animal liquids. It is central to all biological energy pathways. In its pure form, acetic acid is corrosive and characterized by its sharp odor, burning taste, and harmful blistering properties.

Acetic acid is used as a chemical intermediate and solvent with widespread applications throughout industry. Like formaldehyde, acetic acid follows a number of commercial pathways leading to significant commercial final goods. The table below describes the major derivatives of acetic acid and their intended uses:

From this list, it is clear that drivers for acetic acid are mostly non-durable and disposable goods (eg. paints, adhesives, cigarette consumption, aspirin, fibers, plastic bottles).

The chart below shows acetic acid consumption estimates globally by end use for 2015E. VAM and TPA have played an important role in global acetic acid demand growth. VAM has benefited from strong consumer demand globally, and TPA demand has been accelerating because of the growth of polyester demand, mostly for the production of plastic bottles, but also in fiber applications. The other major consumers of acetic acid show positive, although slower, growth.

Markets

The pie chart below breaks down the regional distribution of acetic acid supply and demand. It is clear that the Asian region, lead by China, has provided the most demand growth for acetic acid in recent history. This is particularly the case for TPA, as China has been adding significant polyester production capacity to meet rapidly growing demand associated with its WTO participation, and is investing upstream in new TPA capacity as well. Additionally, acetate esters (oxygenated solvents) are growing in China as reductions in chlorinated and hydrocarbon solvents are enacted. In other regions of the world, demand growth has been much more moderate, ranging from flat to slightly positive for non-Asian regions.